At Karachi hospital, summer camp for children with cancer hopes to create ‘healing memories’

Children, being treated for cancer, attend summer camp organized by the Karachi-based NGO Faryal Kamran Initiative at the Indus Hospital in Karachi on June 20, 2023. (AN Photo)
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Updated 23 June 2023
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At Karachi hospital, summer camp for children with cancer hopes to create ‘healing memories’

  • The month-long camp takes place twice a week in the play area of Indus Hospital
  • Around 200 children come daily from Monday to Thursday to hospital for chemotherapy

KARACHI: The room is brightly lit and colorful, with toys and trinkets lined up on one side and a table full of cupcakes on the other.

This is the scene of a summer camp at Karachi's Indus Hospital, especially organized for children being treated for cancer.

Around 200 children come daily from Monday to Thursday to the hospital for chemotherapy. On Tuesdays and Thursdays while they wait for treatment, the kids attend the summer camp organized in the play area of the Pediatric Oncology Department, in collaboration with the Karachi-based NGO Faryal Kamran Initiative. The summer camp started on June 1 and will conclude on June 26. 

The children come from across Pakistan as well as from neighbouring Afghanistan and Iran.

“We decided to replicate the idea [of a summer camp] in a hospital. This way, the kids who are suffering from illness forget about it for a while, and they take happy, healing memories with them,” the founder of the NGO behind the initiative, Faryal Kamran, told Arab News.

“I think it's a huge thing that if we spend even a little bit of our time with them, it will make them feel that they are loved, they are wanted and [they think] there is someone out there who comes and does all of this for us.”

The activities the children participate in include singing, painting and drawing, and other educational exercises. 

And the parents too are invited to join in, Kamran added, calling it a “time out” for everyone.

“When we came here [at the camp] for the first time, [Mohammad] Ayan got gifts. They gave us something to make, and we made it together,” a cancer patient's mother Abida Nizamani, who had traveled to Karachi from the city of Badin over 215km away, told Arab News.

“He gets happy when he comes here, he gets goodies. We also become happy when we see him happy.”




This combination of pictures created June 23, 2023, shows volunteers from the Karachi-based NGO Faryal Kamran Initiative with children being treated for cancer at the Indus Hospital in Karachi. (Photo courtesy: Faryal Kamran)

11-year-old Masfa Kafeel, under treatment for cancer for two months, said the summer camp was a “good distraction” from medical procedures.

“When I come here, my heart feels a little lighter,” she said. “I have attended it 3-4 times, it’s fun. In the past 2-3 camps, there was music, we got gifts and there were so many activities.”

“They were feeling happy about this,” music educationist, teacher and performer, Jamal Yousuf, said, between singing with the children.

“Like the sounds we used, some actions, and body movements we engaged them in, that they liked. It really helps. Music is a kind of medicine which has no side effects.”

“Every day, they are learning something new and they are forgetting their pain somehow,” Kamran added.

“The idea and concept behind this summer camp is to heal them emotionally.”


Russian cyclist finds warm welcome on Saudi Arabia’s roads 

Updated 20 January 2026
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Russian cyclist finds warm welcome on Saudi Arabia’s roads 

  • Anna Rodnishcheva’s ride through Kingdom is defining chapter in solo expedition
  • Rodnishcheva cycled to Aqaba, crossed the border into Saudi Arabia, and has since traveled through Tabuk, AlUla, Madinah, Jeddah, and Taif on her way to Riyadh

MAKKAH: Solo adventurer Anna Rodnishcheva, 27, has undertaken an ambitious journey that spans countries, climates and cultures — on a bicycle. 

Born and raised in Moscow and trained as a biologist before becoming an event photographer, she now finds herself pedaling thousands of kilometers across unfamiliar landscapes in pursuit of discovery, connection, and the simple joy of movement.

In her conversation with Arab News, Rodnishcheva offered a detailed account of her ongoing route in Saudi Arabia, describing how the expedition is her third major cycling adventure.

After previously riding from Moscow to Sochi and later from Vladivostok to Sochi — a route that stretches across the entirety of Russia — she felt compelled to explore foreign lands by bicycle.

She set off from Moscow heading south last June, passing through Russia, Georgia, and Turkiye before flying from Antalya to Amman. She cycled to Aqaba, crossed the border into Saudi Arabia, and has since traveled through Tabuk, AlUla, Madinah, Jeddah, and Taif on her way to Riyadh.

Rodnishcheva explained that physical preparation played only a small role in her planning. She began slowly and allowed her body to adapt naturally over the first month. 

The true challenge, she said, was in the mental and financial preparation. She spent a year and a half planning the journey, even though she originally intended to postpone it for several more years. 

Ultimately, her belief that “life is short” convinced her to start with the resources she already had. Although she sought medical evaluations and additional vaccinations, she was unable to complete them all and decided to continue regardless.

Her journey through Georgia and Turkiye presented unexpected difficulties. Simple tasks such as finding groceries or locating bicycle repair shops became more challenging outside of Russia, where she knew how to navigate on a budget. 

She also encountered language barriers, though the situation improved when a local cyclist joined her in Georgia. The intense midsummer heat added another layer of difficulty, but she had prepared herself for such conditions.

One of the most striking moments of her trip occurred as she crossed from Jordan into Saudi Arabia. She described the experience as surreal and emotionally overwhelming, likening it to the adventures of a literary hero traveling across the Arabian Peninsula. 

Her anxiety eased unexpectedly when she got a flat tire at the border, bringing her back to the present. 

Despite being warned that crossing by bicycle would be prohibited, the process went smoothly, and she was struck by the friendliness of both Jordanian and Saudi officials. She expressed particular surprise at meeting a female Saudi passport officer, an encounter that challenged her previous assumptions about women’s roles in the Kingdom.

Rodnishcheva said the hospitality she had experienced in Saudi Arabia surpassed anything she had encountered on previous journeys. Drivers frequently stop to offer her water, fruit, or sweets, and several families have generously hosted her in their homes or guest flats. 

She emphasized that she feels completely safe traveling across the Kingdom, especially on the open roads between cities, noting the strong and visible security presence.

She has also observed significant differences in weather. While the stretch from the border to Jeddah was hot despite being winter, the climate changed dramatically after climbing Al-Hada in Taif, turning cooler and windier — a climate she compared to Russian summers.

Rodnishcheva documents her travels primarily through Russian-language platforms such as VK and Telegram. Although she maintains YouTube and Instagram accounts, she explained that her schedule left little time for frequent updates.

Offering a message to women around the world who dream of embarking on similar adventures, she said such journeys were “not as scary as they seem before you start,” though they may not suit everyone.

Her closing advice? “Listen to your heart.”